And the Portuguese user? Patient. Resourceful. We installed Classic Shell. We hacked the registry. We survived. Localisation isn't translation. It's culturalisation .
If you lived through 2012–2013 in Brazil, Portugal, Angola, or Moçambique, you remember the day you installed Windows 8. Not because it was better. Because it was violent . WINDOWS 8 PT
The result: Windows 7 held on until 2020 in thousands of Brazilian companies. Windows 8 PT became a cautionary tale. Windows 10 PT brought back the Start menu. Brought back sanity. But the scars remain. And the Portuguese user
Let’s talk about a ghost. Not Windows Vista—that was a tragedy. Not Windows ME—that was a fever dream. I’m talking about . We installed Classic Shell
Or, Why Portugal Never Asked for a Start Screen
Every time you see a "Configurações" that still feels half-finished, or a search that ignores your regional spelling ("configuração" vs "configuraçao" — yes, the missing cedilha wars), remember: that’s the ghost of Windows 8 PT.
So there you are. A developer in Porto. An accountant in São Paulo. A student in Luanda. Staring at a Metro interface designed for a tablet you don't own.